Concentrate Questions & Answers

The new Concentrate Q&A series has been developed in collaboration with hundreds of students and lecturers from universities around the UK. The result is a series that offers you better support and a greater chance to succeed on your law course than any of its rivals.

Each Concentrate Q&A offers: - annotated answers to guide you step by step through the structure of a great answer - a user-friendly layout, including diagram answer plans to help you visualize your answer structure - practical advice to help you avoid common mistakes - targeted suggestions for how to push your answers even further and achieve the highest marks - a unique coursework skills chapter not available in any other Q&A series

Practise technique; boost your confidence; achieve success.

"A sure-fire way to get a 1st class result." - Naomi M, law student, Coventry University

"Since I started using the OUP Q&A guides my grades have dramatically improved." - Glen Sylvester, law student, Bournemouth University

"Cleverly and carefully put together. Every bit as good as one would expect from OUP. I am also a huge fan of the OUP Concentrate series and I think that these books sit neatly alongside this." - Alice Blythe, law lecturer, University of Bolton

"100% would recommend. Makes you feel like you will pass with flying colours." - Elysia Marie Vaughan, law student, University of Hertfordshire

"Much more substantial and less superficial than competitor Q&As." - Dr. Tony Harvey, Principal Law Lecturer, Liverpool John Moores University

"Excellent. Very detailed answers which makes a change from the brief answers in other guides. They do not assume knowledge and explain things step by step which is fantastic." - Frances Easton, law student, University of Birmingham

"Students often lack experience in writing full answers but seeing suggested answers like this provides them with confidence and structure. I will be recommending this book to my students not just for revision purposes but for the duration of the unit." - Nick Longworth, law lecturer, Manchester Metropolitan University